![]() EFFector Volume 37, Issue 16š Ring's Face Scan PlanWelcome to an all-new EFFector, your regular digest on everything digital rights from the Electronic Frontier Foundation. In our 833rd issue: Google's Android app gatekeeping, surveillance logs reveal racist policing, and the legal risks of putting face recognition on doorbell cameras. |
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āFeatured Story: The Legal Case Against Ringās Face Recognition Feature Recently, Amazon Ring announced it will soon add a troubling new feature to its line of home surveillance cameras and doorbells: facial recognition. This face recognition tool has the potential to violate the privacy rights of millions of peopleāand could result in Amazon breaking state biometric privacy laws.
āEFF Updatesš±APP GATEKEEPING: In the name of "safety," Google recently announced plans to make all Android app developers verify their identities. But why does Google need to see someone's driver's license to evaluate whether an app is safe? On our blog, we explain why this kind of gatekeeping really means more centralized control by both corporations and governmentsāentities that don't always have our best interests at heart. š BIASED POLICING: A new EFF investigation has found that more than 80 law enforcement agencies across the United States have used language perpetuating harmful stereotypes against Romani people when searching the nationwide Flock Safety automated license plate reader (ALPR) network. This data comes from audit logs obtained and analyzed by EFF, providing more evidence that audit logs and internal policies alone cannot prevent a surveillance system from becoming a tool for racist policing. š«” DEPARTMENT OF DEFERENCE: If you or I were spending millions of dollars on new technology, we would probably want some assurance it does what it's supposed to do. But, as we write on our blog, the U.S. Department of Defense seems to want less proof its software works. This year's defense spending bill includes changes that would reduce cost disclosures and testing requirements for military acquisitions of technology like AI, signaling one thing: speed over due diligence. š GATE CRASHING: Check out Gate Crashing, EFF's video series where we talk to people who have used the internet to take nontraditional paths to the very traditional worlds of journalism, creativity, and criticism. In our latest episode, "From DIY to Publishing," we're talking to Preeti Chhibber, a writer who comes from a place that many of us do: being a fan. |
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Donāt Let Tyrants Co-opt TechTechnology is supercharging the attack on democracy by making it easier to spy on people, block free speech, and control what we do. The Electronic Frontier Foundationās activists, lawyers, and technologists are fighting back. |
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"In a densely populated city with a whole bunch of cameras that have facial recognition enabled, that has the potential to be able to track a person's movements."EFF's Mario Trujillo in this week's EFFector audio companion on some of the mass surveillance risks associated with face recognition. Hear our discussion with Mario here.
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